She won in the Debut Fiction category for her novel Mourner’s Bench (University of Arkansas Press), which tells the story of a woman who becomes caught in the civil rights movement of the 1960s from the perspective of her 8-year-old daughter.

“I’m now included among the most celebrated writers in African-American and American literature.” Sandra Faye

“I’m now included among the most celebrated writers in African American and American literature,” said Faye, who someday hopes to teach creative writing. “I quit my job to follow a dream, and this award validates all of the work, the doubt, the criticism, the days sitting in classrooms with all white students and professors and the times I wondered if it would ever happen for a black woman from a small town in rural Arkansas trying to tell the truth about our history.”

According to the release, Faye was inspired to write the novel by her love of To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee.

She asked herself, “What if Scout Finch was African-American? What would that story be?”

Looking to locate all things innovative in the North Texas region? Here’s the interactive toolkit that puts it at your fingertips. The maps include accelerators and incubators, innovation centers, makerspaces, ...

Looking to locate all things innovative in the North Texas region? Here’s the interactive toolkit that puts it at your fingertips. The maps include accelerators and incubators, innovation centers, makerspaces, ...